June 2011

Court Rejects CEQA Challenge to GHG and Water Analysis in Addendum to 1994 EIR

June 23, 2011, by Timothy D. Cremin

Questions often arise as to whether an agency can rely on an "old" certified environmental impact report to approve a revision to a project that was never built.  In Citizens for Responsible Equitable Environmental Development (CREED) v. City of San Diego, the Court upheld the use of a 2008 Addendum to a 1994 environmental impact report (EIR) to approve a revised project.  The Court rejected arguments that the Addendum was insufficient because it failed to analyze greenhouse gas (GHG) impacts which were not addressed in the 1994 EIR.   A GHG analysis was not required because it was not new information that could not have been known in 1994 when the EIR was certified.  The Court found that GHG impacts were known as early as the 1970s.  The Court also found that the City properly incorporated and approved a new water supply assessment in the Addendum.  The opinion also provides good guidance on the requirement to present issues with specificity before the agency as a prerequisite for raising the issues in court (the exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrine).  Click here for a more detailed analysis of the case.

Hydraulic Fracturing Disclosure Bill Moves Through California Legislature

June 20, 2011, by Meyers Nave

On June 1, 2011, the California Assembly passed Assembly Bill 591, which, if ultimately passed by the State Senate and signed by the Governor, would impose a number of new public disclosure requirements on operators conducting hydraulic fracturing operations in California. Among other things, AB 591 would (1) require the operator to list the chemical constituents in the fracturing fluid; (2) require well histories to include information regarding (a) the amount and source of water used in the exploration or production from the well; (b) the radiological components or tracers injected into the well, and (c) a complete list of the chemicals used in the hydraulic fracturing. The information would be submitted to the Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources (“DOGGR”) and would then be added to existing Internet maps on the DOGGR’s Web site and made available to the public.